Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Street Corner Named Desire

Stella's Cafe offers artisanal vegetarian food to the courthouse crowd.

Luke Baumgarten
Tony Brown, along with his mother, Marta, opened Stella\'s Cafe last week. [Photo: Jeff Ferguson]
Tony Brown, along with his mother, Marta, opened Stella\'s Cafe last week. [Photo: Jeff Ferguson]
Tony Brown, along with his mother, Marta, opened Stella\\\'s Cafe last week. [Photo: Jeff Ferguson]

When you buy a restaurant, you get everything, for better or worse.

The oven that sounds like a jet engine. The Costco-bought sandwich fixings. The tub after tub of Crisco.

“I don’t think I’ve ever used Crisco in my life,” Tony Brown says.

It’s not on the menu here, either. It just sits behind the salad case, until he figures out what to do with it.

Last month, Brown bought the J-Walk Bakery with his mother, Marti. They’ve been hustling ever since to turn it into a café that focuses on scratch-baked (Crisco-free) goods, high-end sandwiches and, above all, vegetarian-friendliness. Brown is also the head chef at Mizuna, and he brings a haute sensibility to the $7 on-the-go sandwich.

The result is Stella’s Café, a 15-seat herbivorous oasis in a meat-forward neighborhood near the courthouse. Stella’s best-seller so far is tofu banh mi ($7), a filling mix of soy-and-ginger-marinated tofu topped with pickled daikan radish, pickled cucumber, pickled carrots, pickled red pepper, cilantro and a sriracha aioli. There are four vegetarian sandwiches in all, three of which are vegan.

The Browns haven’t ignored carnivores. There’s a pork and pancetta meatball sandwich ($7), with pickled onions and a mustard aioli topping the titular spheres, adding a creamy tartness. It’s smoky, tangy and cool. And when Brown calls it “pretty hearty,” that’s an understatement.

An array of salads ($3.50/$6) rotates daily, and there’s a single soup du jour ($2.75/$3.50) for now, along with Marti’s baked goods — muffins, cookies, brownies, lemon bars, scones and coffee cake. They’re also keeping J-Walk’s Doma coffee.

The Browns didn’t advertise the opening — they don’t even have a sign above the door yet — they just told some friends (granted, well-connected ones) and hoped word would get out.

By last Thursday, it had. The lunchtime crowd had filled all of the café’s tables. Brown says they’ve been gaining about $100 of business a day since opening and are thinking about adding another 25-30 seats. It’s good news for a location — in a hinterland on the wrong side of Monroe from the courthouse, but not quite to the Flour Mill — that has been a revolving door of cafes and coffee shops in the last few years.

Brown says he wants to eventually offer his pickled items in jars for retail sale, Portlandia-style, but he isn’t sure who to call about that. Can you just sell canned goods off the shelf? That’s one upside to the neighborhood.

“Well, the health department is a block and a half away,” Brown concluded, “I guess I’ll ask them.”

Stella’s Café • 917 W. Broadway Ave • Mon-Fri 7 am-4 pm • (326-4675)

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I found the Crisco comments to be tasteless, no pun intended. The previous menu at The J-Walk cafe contained tons of bakery items that were not only delicious, but were offered at a reasonable price. If Tony Brown has never used Crisco, he should try using it to make himself a vegan pot pie crust. The review I read in The Inlander concerning the J-Walk Bakery and its owners was a positive one and I´m sorry to see them go, albiet for great reasons. To open the article that way sounds like self serving BS and ungratefulness on the part of Tony Brown. Throwing the previous owners under the bus to promote your new endeavor is cowardly. I hope it works for you, but for myself, I´m not buying.

Mar 12, 2012 | Reply to this comment

 

As the owner of Stella's, I couldn't let this rather caustic note pass without comment. nnWe have nothing but respect for the prior owners, and I can attest to the fact Morgana (J-Walk) made some excellent goodies...having sampled them extensively. nnSorry you felt anyone was being thrown under a bus, because that certainly wasn't the intent... Mar 14, 2012

 

I share troutboy´s disappointment about the Crisco comments and have discussed them with many of JWalk´s loyal customers, who were also unimpressed. Morgan worked hard to promote the new cafe, saying nothing but nice things in person and in email. She heartily recommended that all of her customers welcome their "new neighborhood cafe". How sweet of her, and how foolish to slam a cafe that had earned such a loyal (& local - we all work around here) following.

I´d boycotted Stella´s for that very reason until today, when I found myself lunchless and carless. Sigh, off to Stella´s I went. My lunch, and that of my friend, was unimpressive. Bread toasted so lightly it came across as stale. The cookie dry and tasteless. The tofu barely marinated, also tasteless (we are not new to tofu).

Look, the sad truth is that Tony didn´t have editorial review of the article before it was published. He might´ve made an offhanded, innocuous comment about the Crisco, very likely in response to the reporter´s prompting. I get that. But the end result is that it just didn´t set well with me, and I really needed to be blown away today in order to talk myself out of being pissed off about it. I wasn´t blown. I wish no ill will to Stella´s but I´ll be enjoying the reliable yumminess at High Nooner. Apr 02, 2012 | Reply to this comment

 

Agree, Crisco comment was tastelss & certainly not called for. Having said, I also tried their Ruben and was not impressed. It was more like a vegetarian sandwich and frankly I like meat. Bread was stale as well. I´ll stick with my lunch time favorites on the right side of Monroe :-) Apr 11, 2012 | Reply to this comment

 

I grew up in Spokane and live in Seattle now. When I visited Spokane earlier this month, I stopped in at Stella´s based on the recommendation of a friend. It was everything he promised it would be! The jerk tofu was AMAZING, the greens were incredibly fresh, the combination of spices in the sauce was JUST RIGHT. They even accommodated my gluten-free dietary restriction by making the sandwich into a salad for me (all the same toppings, minus the bread, plus a bed of lettuce). Overall, I give them ten stars out of ten. The folks that took offense to the Crisco comments? Well, they must have missed the point. This is a cutting-edge restaurant with whole foods on the menu. Crisco is the opposite of what they´re going for. Not to hurt any feelings, but it was a matter of the writer emphasizing a point -- people who eat at Stella´s are looking to live long, healthy lives. No one argues that baked goods prepared with Crisco aren´t delicious -- they´re just making the point that this new option is healthier. My mom was a baker for many years and Crisco was a staple around our home. As an adult, I have never had any in my house or come up with any good reason to use it. With that said, I think the theme is out with the old and in with the new. I guess that´s a hard idea to swallow for some people. Jun 29, 2012 | Reply to this comment

 

 
 
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